Professor Markus Bockmuehl
Biography:
Prof. Bockmuehl’s teaching and research is in the area of the New Testament in the context of biblical, Jewish and early Christian studies. His approach stresses the symbioses of history with theology, of Christianity alongside Judaism, and of exegesis in and as reception especially of the first three centuries. Before coming to Oxford in 2007, he was a professor at the Universities of St Andrews and Cambridge, and previously taught at Regent College and the University of British Columbia, Canada. In Oxford, he is a Fellow of Keble College and has also served as Associate Head of the University’s Humanities Division (with responsibility for graduate studies). He has a particular commitment to mentoring early career scholars, including a focus on Asia. Among his authored books are Seeing the Word: Refocusing New Testament Study (2006), Simon Peter in Scripture and Memory (2012), and Ancient Apocryphal Gospels (2017). Other recent edited books include The New Cambridge Companion to Jesus (Cambridge University Press 2025), Holman Hunt and The Light of the World in Oxford (Routledge 2025), and The Creed and the Scriptures (ed. with Nathan Eubank, Mohr Siebeck 2024).
Research Area(s):
Biblical Studies: New Testament
Research Interests:
Current book projects include the completion of a monograph on the presence of Jesus in the New Testament and a co-edited volume on the Old Testament as Christian Scripture (both Baker Academic, 2026). I have also begun work on a medium-term project on the relationship between transcendent hope and immanent aspiration in early Christianity.
Research Centres & Projects:
Current and Recent Funded Research Projects
- 2024 Conference on "Understanding the Old Testament as Christian Scripture", Pontifical University of St Thomas (Angelicum), Rome. Keynote and co-organizer.
- 2022 Conference on "The Light of the World in Oxford", Keble College, Oxford.
- 2018-22 Oxford-Notre Dame Project on Scriptural and the Development of the Old Roman Creed ($45,000, joint PI with Nathan Eubank; additional funding from the University of Notre Dame).
- 2018-19 seminar on Dead Sea Scrolls Research at Oxford (joint PI with Hindy Najman & Martin Goodman). Proceedings published in Revue de Qumran (2021)
Recent Postdoctoral Fellowships Mentored
- 2020-2022 European Research Council (Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions) Postdoctoral Fellowship in New Testament for Jeremiah Coogan, following an internationally advertised competition (€225,000)
- 2018-2020 European Research Council (Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions) Postdoctoral Fellowship in New Testament and Dead Sea Scrolls for Daniel Schumann, following an internationally advertised competition (€200,000).
Editorships:
Associate Editor, Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament.
Links:
Publications:
Recent Books (since 2017; Authored or Edited/Translated)
2025 The New Cambridge Companion to Jesus. Ed. M. Bockmuehl. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press. Pp. xiv+426. ISBN 9781009233026
2025 Holman Hunt and The Light of the World in Oxford. Ed. M. Bockmuehl. Routledge Studies in Theology, Imagination and the Arts. London/New York: Routledge. Pp. xii+183. ISBN 9781032533308
2024 The Creed and the Scriptures. Ed. M. Bockmuehl & N. Eubank. Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament. WUNT 519. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck. Pp. viii+350. ISBN 9783161615986
2021 Wolfram Kinzig, Christian Persecution in Antiquity. Trans. M. Bockmuehl. Waco: Baylor University Press. Pp. 188. ISBN 9781481313889
Articles and Book Chapters
2025 ‘The Risen Jesus.’ in The New Cambridge Companion to Jesus, 72-87. Ed. M. Bockmuehl. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press.
2024 “Christ Stopped at Ephraim (John 11.54).” In Early High Christology: John among the New Testament Writers, 31-41, 227-234. Ed. Chris Blumhofer, Diane Chen & Joel B. Green. Minneapolis: Fortress.
2024 “The Myth of Creedless Judaism.” In The Creed and the Scriptures, 15-29. Ed. M. Bockmuehl & N. Eubank. WUNT 519. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck.
2024 ‘Friendships Between Jews and Christians in Antiquity.’ In D Friedman & K Czajkowski (eds), Looking in, Looking Out: Jews and Christians in Mutual Contemplation. Essays for Martin Goodman on His 70th Birthday, 291-319. JJSSup 212. Leiden/Boston: Brill.
2023 ‘Jesus the Just.’ Journal for the Study of the New Testament 46: 19-36. https://doi.org/10.1177/0142064X231191188 (open access)
2022 ‘Being Emmanuel: Matthew’s Ever-Present Jesus?’ New Testament Studies 68: 1-12.